Thursday, December 20, 2012

NY Times invited S. B. Woo and 5 others to speak out on "top colleges limiting the number of Asian admissions." The site is called "Room for Debate." Click on http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate

YOU are invited to comment on S.B.'s or all other's views. Let the world hear you on this critical issue! The following is S. B.'s submittal.

Subject: What Price for Limiting Asian Enrollment?

From the get-go I want to state that (1) there is irrefutable evidence that top colleges are limiting the number of Asian admissions, and (2) what's at stake is not a few more admissions for Asians, but the much larger interest of America.

The % of Asian students in California Institute of Technology, which uses a "race-neutral" admission policy, roughly follows a time-dependent population of Asians of college ages. Those of Ivies stay fixed at 17% + 2%. It clearly shows that these colleges set a quota for % of Asian students.

The above 3 facts point to top colleges' "merits-be-damned" attempt to limit the number of Asian students. They did that once before -- against Jewish students about a century ago.

Now, let's see what is at stake? They include

i) America's core value of equal opportunity is trampled upon. America and Asian American students suffer.

ii) The 14th amendment on equal protection is trampled upon. Again, America and Asian American students suffer.

iii) The meritocracy of the American culture is compromised.

iv) The credibility of elite colleges suffers. The administrators of these colleges may be steadfast in their righteous posturing. But as the truth emerges, fewer people are with them; more are shaking their heads and chuckling at their facade.

The meritocracy of the American culture is compromised. America's future is too important to allow this type of admission practice to continue hurting all of us. It's time for the game to stop.

Friday, November 30, 2012

If you do NOT make weekly donations to Obama's campaign, ignore the rest.

For people who have done so, most might assume that the commitment would automatically cease AFTER the election. Unfortunately, it does NOT.

To stop it, please

1. type "donate.barackobama.com/refund" in the web browser line, WITHOUT http: or www,
2. then hit the return, and a website will show up that says "Manage your Monthly or Weekly donation",
3. follow the instruction there, and done!

80-20 gratefully thank you AGAIN for making such a commitment in support of 80-20's endorsement of Pres. Obama. You made us proud.

Will it be better if both political parties earnestly COMPETE to share our rightful concerns? Of course. Then it is obvious that we must be prepared to SWING to vote for a Republican candidate if he/she is more committed to make us equals.

Our number is SMALL. The % of Asians, Hispanics and blacks in America's electorate is 3%, 10% and 13% respectively. To compensate for our small size, we must have the ability to SWING. See numerical examples of how Asian Ams. could have helped Romney win the electoral college vote of FL and VA. Go to item 3) shown in http://80-20initiative.blogspot.com/2012/11/great-news-from-last-election.html .

In reality, our bargaining power TRIPLES.

80-20 has been taught lessons by the Democrat Party & Asian Am officials, be they D or R. Regretfully, they often care for their interests only, instead of justice and/or equal opportunity. A SWING bloc vote is the only reliable protection for us. Elected Asian Am officials are by nature partisan first, their own constituents second, the interests of the Asian Am. community is at best a third to them. Some even betray our interests to protect their own political interests.

3) 80-20 Is Truly Non-Partisan

Once 80-20 has endorsed a political candidate, it is extremely partisan. IT HAS TO BE! But prior to its endorsement, 80-20 is truly non-partisan and is for you and you only. We give our time, money, career ambitions and sometimes even the sacrifice of personal relationship with former political colleagues to serve YOUR INTERESTS ONLY.

Help us back OR YOU MAY LOSE US. Some of the first generation leaders in 80-20 are getting on in age, thought they have invaluable experience.

FORWARD this email to your Asian Am friends and get them to SUBSCRIBE to our email list. Truth and political maturity will make us EQUAL citizens.

Answer: "People in the know" know that once a minority acquires the political maturity to deliver a BIG bloc vote, it is on its way to become an equal partner in USA. Both Democrats & Republicans will compete to address our rightful concerns, provided that there is adequate political leadership within the Asian Am. community!

WHO BUT 80-20 PREACHED AN ASIAN AM. BLOC VOTE! No other individuals and/or organizations did.

(1)"Awesome!!!!!!!! Keep up the good work. The Asian-Am community has needed an organization like yours for a long, long time (I'm 50 years old). " Edwin Hom, Senior Litigation Counsel, NJ

(2) "Good job. We should enhance our block-vote power further via education. I would pledge $1000.00 to the education division of 80-20 for educational effort to raise the goal of "80-20" to "90-10". I think we Asian-Am Can." Phil Choong

(S.B's reply: "Phil, Watch out for the next 80-20 EF e-newsletter. It'll show the huge POWER of a 90-10 bloc vote as compared with that of an 80-20.)

(3) "I would like to make a comment about the Asian bloc - we have just started to realize our potential. David Brooks, NYTimes columnist, and Jeffery Brown on PBS all brought up statistics that included the Asian vote. " Karen B Chang

(6) "WE WON! - I'm not just cheering for President Obama, I'm also cheering for the show of power o 57f5 f AsAms: We won by showing our collective political power that no one can ignore any more! . . . Now let's use this earned power to press for our equal rights - in university campuses, in corporate offices, in federal court offices, in local governments, in military bases, ... and more!" Yue

(7)"That is a great news. Glad that Asians finally care about politics. Congratulations to your hard work." Mary Kuo

(8) "Congratulations on your good work. In case you have not seen this in the LA Times today." Frederic and Julia Wan

Had Romney promised to help make us equal citizens, we might have at least delivered VA and FL to him, assuming Asian Ams are politically mature enough to deliver a swing bloc vote since we want to be equal Citizens NOW!

Note that the "impact" is twice that of "AsAm MOD," because AsAms have already voted to support Obama. Hence, if we decide to vote for Romney, then we first subtract the "AsAm MOD" from Obama's vote and then add the same to Romney's vote.

We couldn't change the outcome for Ohio and Nevada. But if our registered voters in those 2 states will increase by another 40% by 2016, WE CAN CHANGE THE OUTCOME OF ALL FOUR STATES, if we endorse the other guy and thereby making the other guy the winner.

Power is a currency that Asian Ams MUST have in order to win equal opportunity for the 17 million of us. Don't be naïve. Neither the D Party nor the R Party loves us. They work with us for their own interests.

Friday, November 02, 2012

If you have friends and relatives in OH, VA & FL, forward this e-newsletter to them.

He who wins OH, wins the presidency. But having VA and FL will help ensure it.

An UNDERSTANDING achieved yesterday with the Obama campaign, prompted leaders of 80-20 PAC to each donate another $1,000 to Obama. In addition, we, including S. B. Woo who has retired to PAC's second line, will be working to our bones to help Obama win.

Why? For 2 reasons:
(1) So that our community will get to enjoy the FRUITS of this UNDERSTANDING, and
(2) All new immigrants to America need to use the political process to become equals. The Irish, Polish, Italians and Jewish Americans did that. We are no different.

80-20 endorsed Pres. Obama earlier. Now, we are going all out to help him win.

FORWARD this e-newsletter to your friends in OH, VA & FL. You need to proudly do your share in helping your children become equals.

Friday, October 26, 2012

Silence is NOT golden in American politics In life as in anything else, you don't get what you deserve, you get what you negotiate. Democracy is a tool and not an end to itself. Equal rights and opportunities are earned through activism, and seldom bestowed upon you due to someone else's enlightenment. For an ethnic minority like AsAms, casting a unified bloc vote is the only way we can collectively flex our political muscle for impact.

Negotiation is give and take In the national as well as local elections, we negotiate candidate's commitment to AsAms in exchange for our votes. National campaigns aside, our energized chapters also address local issues. For example, NAAPAC-Michigan Chapter sent a questionnaire to 26 candidates for the board of regents/trustees/governors of U. of Michigan, Michigan State U., and Wayne State U. requesting Yes/No answers on AsAm representation in academic leadership positions, before the 1800 AsAm faculty members will cast their ballots on Nov. 6. So far, 9 have answered with resounding Yeses. These candidates will get the AsAm votes and will be held responsible for their commitment once elected. Do you think they feel the heat?

Do we have the wisdom to learn from African Americans?
Click this Black Folks Must Vote document to see how African Americans earned their equal rights and why they are mobilizing to vote for their collective interests. Learn from all the peoples who struggled before us, the Poles, the Italians, the Scots, the Jews, the blacks and the Hispanics, who exercised their civic rights to become equal citizens of this great nation. You have the drive and smarts to make a living and to provide for your families. Now see the bigger picture!

Will you stand in unity for our collective interest?
Will you show up at the voting booths on Nov 6 and help cast a decisive bloc vote for Obama?

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Will you do your part to support our "$5.82 donation" campaign for a bloc vote? Need thousands more donation hits to demonstrate we are serious about getting our voices heard!

Romney claimed, as President, he will never apologize for America

Anyone makes mistakes, having the courage to right wrongs is a virtue, not a weakness.

Consider this:

1) The Congress has apologized for the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1896, and the Japanese Internment Program of the World War II, which were egregious wrongs that one should learn from and never to repeat.

2) Article 1 of the Florida Constitution still features an "Alien Land Law" that prohibits AsAms from owning land in Florida. This 1926 law targeted Asian immigrants to prevent them from buying farm land, and using their agricultural skills and labor to compete with American farmers. Can you believe it is now 2012? Florida had earned a dubious distinction to being the only State in the US where this racist law is still enshrined in the current Constitution (despite not being enforced). The new 80-20 NAAPAC-Florida Chapter is committed to purging this ignominious law from Florida's books.

History will repeat itself if we do not learn the lessons.

Stereotyped as "perpetual foreigners", any international incident has the potential to ratchet up xenophobic sentiment that hurts all AsAms. When this happens, politicians will once again compete to be the toughest to "protect American interest and values". Do we want a President who is humble enough to learn from history or do you want one who is "infallible"?

Watch this video of George Takei, a survivor of the Japanese Internment Camp, as to why this election is so important:

"I know how far we've come. I've lived it.

When I was 5 years old, my family was forced from our home and into a "relocation center" -- where we lived for four years behind barbed-wire fences during World War II. We were American citizens, imprisoned for no other reason than what we looked like.

Through shared sacrifice, we've made remarkable achievements in the last 70 years -- advances that we should all be proud of. That's why this came as a real shock to me: Less than half of us are even registered to vote. I know we can do better."

Thursday, October 11, 2012

The tight race is a golden opportunity to showcase AsAm political power by decisively tipping the election outcome with an AsAm bloc vote.

Remember G.W. Bush become President by a margin of 572 votes in Florida! Will you do your part in our "$5.82 donation" campaign for a bloc vote? Need thousands more donation hits to demonstrate we are serious about getting our voices heard!

Romney cannot win without Florida

Romney's campaign rebuffed our repeated attempts to reach out to him.

DON'T reward Romney's arrogance with your votes!

80-20 has ramped up efforts to defeat him in the critical Battle Ground States (Florida, Ohio and Michigan). Here is how we're doing it in Florida:

80-20 Florida chapter established!

We welcome and congratulate the leaders in Florida for organizing the 80-20 NAAPAC-FL Chapter. The chapter was formed in September and immediately kicked into action to influence the election by:

Organizing volunteers for canvases and phone banks for the Obama Campaign

Giving presentations to various AsAm groups through TV, radio, social media, and group discussions

Encouraging 80-20 NAAPAC volunteers to support local elections / candidates

Participating in the 8th Annual Experience Asia Festival in Tallahassee

We urge all AsAms in Florida to become members of the Florida Chapter. Freedom is not Free. Please take action Today…

80-20 NAAPAC-FL members were among the key organizers of the 8th Annual Experience Asia Festival in Tallahassee, a huge event held on Oct. 6 with over 15,000 attendees. Members from Jacksonville and Miami came to Tallahassee to introduce 80-20 to the general public in the capital city of Florida and received warm and positive responses. They provided information about 80-20, its goals and objectives, and its current position and the bloc vote strategy regarding the upcoming election. Thousands of flyers were given to the AsAm audience encouraging them to vote and vote in bloc!

Their next big events are:

The Early VOTE Picnic "GOTV Picnic" organized by UDiON Foundation and ICNEF on November 3rd in Jacksonville, FL and

The annual "IRCC Diwali Festival of Lights Festival" in Fort Lauderdale on November 10th.

Weekly NAAPAC – FL radio announcement and interview by Outreach Inc. on Indian Radio program, "Our Voice", on 980 AM between 3PM & 4PM. You can access it on the web via http://www.whsrradio.com/streamer/

More Life Members Joined!

We are greatly honored to have 3 new 80-20 life members: Albert Chen & Su Xu of Florida, Miranda Cheung of California

We also thank these generous donors: James Cheung of California, $5000 Emmy Ng of California, $5000 Miranda Cheung of California, $5000 Jiang Jiang of Michigan, $405

Is your future worth $5.82?

People in the battleground states are working hard to shape a better future for AsAms.

If you care about yourselves, your family and the wellbeing of our nation—as I believe you must—then I beg you to take two minutes to read to the end of this letter.

Where does a cart go when pulled by two horses in opposite directions? You get the point. As a minority group, we had long been deemed irrelevant and inconsequential—until the 2008 Presidential election when AsAms UNITED to deliver a decisive bloc vote for Obama—in return for his written promises to rectify long-neglected civil rights grievances that AsAms suffered.

What LANDMARK progress has NAAPAC (80-20 Initiative) won for you through Obama?

For the first time since 1964, the US Dept. of Labor finally in 2009 began enforcing The Equal Rights Act (EO11246, signed by President Johnson), on behalf of 17.5 million AsAms. This is the law that helped propel millions of Blacks, Hispanics and women into the upper ranks of management at universities, in private industry and in federal government. An egregious 45 years of workplace inequality was FINALLY ending.

More than doubling of the number of AsAm federal judges from 6 to 17; major increases in the number of AsAm presidents and provosts at American universities; in numerous top administration positions; and the creation of Senior Executive Service (SES) Development Program for AsAms under the leadership of Chris Lu, Obama's cabinet secretary

Why we CANNOT afford to lose traction or momentum due to split voting

With iron-willed-unity, Jewish Americans gained incredible political power to reward as well as punish politicians who dare to act at odds with the Jewish community's common interests. For each and every presidential election cycle, 80-20 NAAPAC reached out to both the Republican and Democratic candidates. The Republicans have again deliberately ignored us, leaving us with NO choice but to REWARD the candidate who has delivered on the promises and PUNISH the one arrogant enough to believe they can kick us aside without consequence

A united bloc vote for Obama is the ONLY way for us to protect and ensure continued progress in the next four years. Bloc voting is the ONLY way AsAm will continue to gain progress and political clout so our grievances can continue to be addressed as we gain our full rights as equal citizens.

A donation in the unique amount of $5.82 (not $5, not $20, not $50 which is not noticeable), once or every week till election day by you and your family members and friends, sends a special message to the Obama administration that AsAm are united and gearing up for a repeat bloc vote. Don't look to others to do this for you—that's the kind of apathetic attitude that got us deep in the political hole in the past. NEVER AGAIN! If we want to be taken seriously, we have to take serious action. NOW.

DO IT FOR YOURSELF. FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS. And for a better America

When all AsAms can become all that they are capable of being and contribute fully to building a better and stronger America, everyone benefits. Our nation will be transfused with a full measure of the industrious perseverance, technological ingenuity, and job creating entrepreneurship that AsAm are famous for.

Disillusioned? Your vote doesn't matter? Think Florida 2000, where President Bush was elected by a mere 537 "hanging chad" votes. At that time, Florida had 300,000 AsAms. A 0.1% swing in the AsAm votes could have elected a different president. Would there still be the 1 trillion $$$ Iraq war with 4487 US soldiers killed and 32,223 seriously wounded?

Motivated? You can help shaping an AsAm bloc vote by participating in our "$5.82 donation" campaign, which is designed to challenge the characteristic apathy among AsAms that earned us the well-deserved treatment of being ignored.

Historically, polls indicate the vote/donation ratio is ~20:1 among the general population. When few AsAms donate, the politicians from BOTH parties will conclude it is safe to ignore AsAms once again. Will you allow this to happen? Is your future worth $5.82?

"YOU must be the change you wish to see in the world" — Mahatma Gandhi

Step-by-Step Voter Registration Guide Are you registered to vote? Two types of citizens need to register: (1) those who've never registered, and (2) having registered but have moved to a new address. Please fulfill your obligation as a citizen and an Asian American.

On page 1, go to the map and click on your state. That leads you to page 2.

On page 2, fill out the form: check each square box on top and fill in required info next to blanks with a red *. Then click on the "Preview My Voter Registration" to go to page 3.

On page 3, you proofread the informat 743 ion, then click "Get My Application" or download at the bottom of the page.

Upon receiving your application, your state will mail you a voter registration card. YOU NEED TO FILL THAT OUT AND MAIL IT IN. Only then are you truly registered. Note that registering to vote is ALWAYS A TWO-STEP PROCESS, whether you register via a website or travel to a registration place.

When the "Voter Registration Card" comes, you may want to choose to vote Absentee. That is you can VOTE BY MAIL instead of going to a polling place. Most states allow "vote by mail." About 20 days before Nov. 2, you will receive a ballot on which you may check whom to vote. Put the ballot in an envelope, sign on the back side of the envelope, mail it and you will have voted. You will have fulfilled your sacred duty to YOUR CHILDREN, and as an EDUCATED person and a citizen.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Each click by you and your friends bring us closer tothe 10,000-donor show-of-strength.Won’t you help make AsAms a force in this election by breaking that vicious cycle of political apathy? We don’t lack inpopulationsize but lackparticipationanddiscipline. Many smart individuals can add to collective irrelevancy if the voting ratio is a 50/50 split. When politicians see that, they ignore us.

Are we selfish to put our civil rights interests first?

This is a concern voiced by some as they approach this crucial election year, and is unfounded and without basis because it incorrectly assumes a zero-sum society in which if AsAms do better, other ethnic groups would proportionately suffer.

If Susan B. Anthony did not single-mindedly champion women’s rights . . . if Martin Luther King did not resolutely toil for civil rights for Blacks . . . where would this nation be? Consequently, ALL Americans benefit and stand on the shoulder s of these giants who made this nation better for all, ONE issue at a time. It is time for AsAms to unite and do the same.

AsAms have long endured an ignominious history of suffering and discrimination (from the Chinese Exclusionary Act to the Japanese Internment, from denial of service benefits to Filipino veterans after WWII, to over four decades of grievously delayed enforcement of Equal Opportunity (EO 11246), etc.. As a result, AsAms have been denied the same equal opportunity that the majority of Americans enjoy, to become all that they are capable of being and to contribute fully to building a better and stronger America. This is not only injustice, it is detrimental to our nation. It hurts not just AsAms, it deprives this nation of a full measure of the industrious perseverance, technological ingenuity, and job-creating entrepreneurship that AsAm are famous for.

Lastly, we cannot forget the senseless prejudice-induced deaths of Vincent Chin, Denny Chen and Harry Lew. In our Quest for Equality and Justice, their tragic deaths must not be in vain. Therefore, to passionately champion AsAm civil rights is a patriotic duty that we ALL must bear and carry out with determination.

If WE do not put AsAm civil rights issues front, center and foremost in our political goals, then WHO will???

Even setting aside the compelling patriotic duty, there remains our moral duty to future generations of AsAms. As a minority group FAR FAR smaller than women in the 19th Century or the Blacks in the 1960’s, we have even less political clout based on numbers. The ONLY way we can free our children and grandchildren for this grievous history of injustice and inequality is to use our bloc vote to actively support those politicians willing to rectify these issues, and to defeat those who (through action or inaction) choose to continue that inequality.

NAAPAC is calling on all it supporters as well as their friends and families to show the Obama campaign the unity and strength of the AsAm bloc support by donating the unique amount of $5.82/person/week. If you are able, please donate $80.20/week through everyone in your household in the remaining weeks until election time.

It is the NECESSARY thing to do, the right thing to do. And it is the PATRIOTIC thing to do.

The best way we can join hands to serve our community, and fulfill our moral obligation and civic duty to help build a better nation, is to champion an end to discrimination so that ALL people can have an equal opportunity to attain the American Dream. At the end of this Civil Rights Rainbow, is a better, more abundant America for all.

It’s time to do your part for the AsAm Civil rights Movement. For all of us, there is no greater imperative. There is no greater calling to service beyond self. Thank you.

Friday, September 14, 2012

Do you have the audacity to hope that one day AsAms will gain equal opportunity through a bloc vote?

When we set up a goal of gathering 50,000 signatures to challenge the higher college barrier on AsAms, many thought of it as a fantasy. WE DID IT. Now the plight of AsAm students is FRONT and CENTER in the Supreme Court case "Fisher v. UT Austin", mentioned 22 times in the main "Fisher" brief, with the oral argument commencing in October 2012.

We now issue a new challenge of making 10,000 small donations, $5.82 each, directly to the Obama Campaign, a uniquely identifiable amount to show our resolve to deliver a bloc vote (with an 80/20 ratio) to win equal rights

Mobilize your family and friends to make single, monthly or weekly donations of $5.82. Let a sea of $5.82 send BOTH political parties a wakening call.

"You may not be a fan of 80-20 or SB Woo;You may not be a Democrat; You may not vote for Obama in November (I wish you would!) – by sending in your $5.82 now, you are making Asian Americans visible as a block to the politicians; this unique amount will be highly visible. Thank you! Ignatius C. Wang"

What a doer! Are you one? Don't like the status quo? What have you done?

"The Pessimist complains about the wind. The optimist expects it to change. The leader adjusts the sails." -John Maxwell

$5-$6 is a token amount that virtually all of us should be able to afford. $5.82 is an amount that stands out in the sea of $5 and $10 donations and signifies our resolve to deliver a bloc vote in the coming election to get our rightful concerns heard. The goal of swinging 80% of the AsAm votes to one candidate is the namesake of 80-20's mission. In this billion dollar election cycle, the actual dollar amount has little significance. However, a flood of uniquely identifiable $5.82 donations is a clear indication of AsAms resolve to deliver a bloc vote as a vehicle to win equal rights. It will speak loudly to BOTH candidates/parties. Please kindly let us know once you have made a donation to Obama, simply reply "I did it" and let us know how much you donated so we track the progress.

Is 80-20 all talk and no action?

80-20NAAPAC passed a resolution to immediately donate $25K from our own fund, the maximum allowed under the federal election law ($10K to the Obama Campaign and $15K to the DNC). 80-20 is not a rich organization, but we put our wallet where our mouth is in our fight to win equality for all AsAms.

In addition, all of our board members led by personal examples: Immediately after donating $5.82 for each of their family members, many also additionally and generously donated to the Obama campaign, including:

Friday, August 31, 2012

80-20 National Asian American Political Action
Committee (NAAPAC) held its Endorsement Convention on August 26, 2012 at the HiltonLos
AngelesAirport. Thirty three delegates comprising of 11
Republicans, 11 Independents, and 11 Democrats were elected by the 80-20 membership. Although Republicans comprise only about 15% of the
Asian American voters, 80-20 allocated a full 1/3of
the delegate seats to them. As usual,
this was one of the many extraordinary efforts made by 80-20 to reach out to
the Republican candidate, but received no response from the Romney campaign. Following a secret ballot by the Convention
delegates, 80-20 NAAPAC announced that it endorses Obama with an overwhelming majority of delegate
votes. Henceforth, delegates agreed to unanimously support the Obama
campaign.

Why?

Obama
has won our support through action.

During his first term President Obama began to
include APA in the enforcement of Exec. Order 11246 so that Asian
Americans can finally have an equal opportunity to rise in workplaces according
to their skill and merit. This is the first time in the history of the United States
that any President has acted to enforce EO 11246 for Asian Americans. During the Bush
Era, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao refused to enforce EO 11246 in
spite of repeated appeals by 80-20 and other Asian Americans organizations.

President Obama has also appointed many preeminent
Asian American jurists to the federal courts, more than doubling the number of Asian American federal
judges from 8 in 2008 to 17 today, including two on the Appeals
court.

Deliver
a bloc vote to prove Asian American votes can make a winning difference in this
election. Or be a pile of
sand and be ignored.

Our
weekly newsletters will guide you step by step how to help Obama AND our community win. If you want to make a
difference in this election, be on the lookout for our newsletters and take action as directed.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

The current “race conscious” college
admissions policy is Anti-affirmative action, as shown in this poignant cartoon.

It requires AsAm students to vastly outperform the whites
for equal opportunity. It took a “two
wrongs make it a right” approach to surreptitiously pass the burden of
correcting “historical injustice” (that the whites committed against the minorities)
onto the silent AsAm community. It is a “white man’s burden” carried by AsAm students.

80-20 stands firmly for equality,
the most fundamental American value.

All people must be judged
by individual merits. In college admissions, individual merits should be broadly definedto include academic qualification necessary for
successful college learning, and personal character strengths such as
perseverance, good work ethic, leadership skills, and individual
initiative to overcome adverse conditions. The last point would help the
true needy but worthy students, rather than wealthy students who happen to have
the right skin colors, as the current race-conscious policy tends to deliver.

Race and ethnicity are immutablegroup
characteristics that an individual cannot change, therefore cannot possibly be
a personal merit no matter how broadly defined.
The current race-conscious policy creates resentment and stigmatizes the
so-called beneficiaries. It breeds
cynicism and invites abuse (“Elizabeth Warren”, anyone who have undocumented
1/32 heritage of the right kind?). Worst
of all, it hurts American competitiveness while masking over deep-rooted social
problems, thereby permanently condemning some minority groups it supposed to
help.

“I have a dream”, DO YOU?

“I have a dream that my four children will one day live in a nation
where they willnot be judged by the color of their skin but
by the content of their character.”
-Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

More than a generation has passed since Dr. King’s speech,
why is his dream slipping further away all the time?

“The
way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on
the basis of race.”-John Roberts, Chief Justice of
the Supreme Court of the United States

Dr. King and Chief Justice Roberts
get it. This is why we appeal to the
Supreme Court to reconsider that current race-conscious practice in college
admission.

Do you have the courage to fight for
your basic rights as afforded by the “Equal Protection Clause” of the 14th
Amendment in the US Constitution? Will
you be a proud participant of unfolding history to fulfill your generational
duty to your children and grandchildren?

Friday, July 20, 2012

Call to Action!

Presidential election is the perfect
time for “collective bargaining” via a SWING BLOC
vote.

By focusing on Battle Ground States (BGS) which are
currently split ~50/50, a small minority like AsAms can decisively affect the
election outcome, and hence motivate politicians to court our votes. Hold them
accountable through a written and enforceable pledge to our community!

When solicited by either campaign,
please answer "I will not contribute to your campaign until you have
answered 80-20's questionnaire. Indeed, if you are endorsed by 80-20
National Asian American PAC, I'll donate, vote for you, and try to get all
friends & relatives to vote for you."

If polled on the phone, answer "undecided." If
both R and D see in their own respective polls that a large % of Asian Ams are
undecided, they'll court us a lot harder. Please pass this important message to all Asian Ams.

80-20 will hold its Endorsement
Convention (EC) on Sunday, August 26 in Los Angeles.

Our membership elected EC delegates, comprised of equal
numbers of Democrats, Republicans and Independents, will debate which candidate
to endorse based on his deeds and pledges to our community and then the
delegates will vote according to their informed judgment of the two
candidates. 80-20 will endorse the
candidate winning the majority of delegates’ votes.

Friday, July 13, 2012

The
schools are smart, they know the best defense for race conscious policies is to
portray all minorities love it. Vocal AsAm
allies create just that impression.

Watch this AsAm legal counsel for
Univ. of Texas (UT) publicly proclaiming “Fisher v. UT Austin” to be without
any merit during the critical period the Supreme Court was evaluating whether
to take up Fisher’s petition. Fortunately the Supreme Court did NOT listen to
him.

With “Fisher” moving
forward, many AsAm orgs rushed to the schools’ rescues ONCE AGAIN!

They
DID it in the past

APALC and its affiliates filed an
amicus brief in support of Univ. of Michigan’s race-conscious admissions
program in the 2003 Supreme Court case, “Grutter v. Bollinger”, insisting AsAms
are “not harmed by” but rather “benefited from” such practice. Thanks to APALC, the “Grutter” decision
opened the flood gate to enhanced race-conscious policies many schools
practiced over the last 9 years that your children and grand-children currently
enjoy: UT Austin announced on the VERY SAME DAY of the “Grutter” decision that it would RE-INTRODUCE race/ethnicity into college admission,
which led to the current “Fisher v. UT Austin” case. When the “Fisher” case was at the US Fifth
Circuit court in 2010, APALC and its affiliates promptly filed an amicus brief
again, ensuring the upholding of “race conscious” policy which has now reached the
Supreme Court.

Emboldened by “Grutter”, AALDEF and
its affiliates filed an amicus brief to extend race-conscious admissions policy
into K-12 education. In the 2007 Supreme Court cases “Parents v.
Seattle School District” and “Meredith v. Jefferson”, they argued for the
school districts’ racial balancing plan.
Under such a policy, a student could be bused to other school districts
if the school across the street reached the predetermined racial quota. Imagine the agony of AsAm parents who
literally sacrificed everything to move into a good school district only to
find that their children really need to “benefit from” forced racial
integration into a bad school district.

Now
they are doing it AGAIN

APALC and AALDEF have publicly
announced they will file an amicus brief YET AGAIN
at the Supreme Court (August 13th deadline). If they are as successful as they have been in the
past, you can be rest assured that your children and grand-children will
“benefit from” the race conscious college admissions policy for the next
quarter century.

In preparation, AALDEF issued a
press release on June 25 titled “The Majority of AsAms Support Race-Conscious Admissions
Policies”, aimed specifically to discredit 80-20EF’s historic open
& neutral survey of 50,000 people showing overwhelming AsAm support for
race-neutral, merit-based college admissions.

Our response is simple: Why don’t we work together to conduct a
large-scale AsAms survey specifically on college admissions, designed by
professionals, monitored by neutral third parties, and open to all AsAms, to
find out who is lying?

If you disagree with the APALC and AALDEF stance, please let
them know their upcoming amicus brief will do immeasurable harm to AsAm
interests, especially if it creates the impression “The Majority of AsAms
Support Race-Conscious Admissions Policies”, as AALDEF publicly proclaimed.

It takes courage to challenge the
status quo and defend our core interest.
Your silence has been interpreted by APALC and
AALDEF, and maybe by the Supreme Court, as “the silent majority” supporting the
current policy, a perfect recipe to ensure your children and
grandchildren would continue to “benefit from” the race-conscious policy for
the next quarter century.

Will you do your part to support
80-20 in this ferocious battle for equality?
The future of your children is in your hands.